Colleges Like University of Denver & Elon (3.9/1430, psychology/philosophy, < $50K with merit)

I’m glad it worked out well in the end for your daughter! These are definitely the kinds of questions that spin around in my brain (I’m not the OP, but have a similarly situated kid.). We need some amount of merit, but I do want my kids to be challenged.

If you have suggestions that would fit those parameters - schools that are more challenging, but offer merit to get COA ~ $50,000, I would appreciate those. At my kid’s high school, it appears that Wake Forest is stingy on merit. Not many kids from our school apply to Davidson, so I don’t know as much about merit there. (I believe those were ones you suggested earlier). If you have any other suggestions, that would be great!

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If you start your own thread, I’d bet you get a lot more responses specific to your query.

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While we loved St. Olaf, to me it feels way smaller than Denver and Elon. While Denver and Elon talk about community a lot, St. Olaf oozes community. It’s so cozy.

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Going to second Furman, Butler, Gonzaga, and throw in Creighton, U of Tulsa, and U of San Diego. My 3.7 GPA kid got excellent merit from all (didn’t apply to USD) and is attending Trinity U also with good merit.

ETA I have also heard concerns about crime around Rhodes lately.

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I should add that my D22’s GPA was weighted. Might’ve been a 3,8 instead of a 3.7 but that was weighted. She took 3 AP classes. I think it was maybe 3.5/3.6 UW. Her school didn’t report that so I’d have to do the math on it.

Elon’s 75th percentile SAT is just 1330 and the ACT 75th percentile is 30. Your D should easily get in there. 20% of kids were in the top 10% of their high school class. If I did my math right (and there’s more than a decent chance I didn’t) the admit rate is 69%. I’d view it as an academic safety.

I don’t know about the merit money on these (my D22 didn’t apply to any of them) but might be worth looking into Denison, Kenyon, Bucknell, Whitman, Skidmore, Sewanee, maybe U Rochester or Emory.

I agree that Creighton, University of Tulsa, and St. Olaf are all worth looking into. One other school would be University of St. Thomas. It is a similar size as Elon and University of Denver. It’s located in a cute residential neighborhood in St. Paul, MN. Gorgeous campus. Location is good for internships. Good study abroad. I know a number of St. Thomas psychology grads, and they were well prepared for grad school. There is open enrollment with other schools in the area including Macalester. St. Thomas is looking to increase its national draw and reputation, so I imagine that a strong student like your daughter would receive excellent merit. It would make a great safety.

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@AustenNut had Jesuit colleges in their list, it may be worth it to look at the entire Jesuit college list. Most of them are that middle size, which is kind of hard to find, and will be strong on community like Denver and Elon. Both of my kids with lower stats that your student received good merit from Jesuit schools (LMU, where my daughter attended, but COA is high, and Loyola of Chicago, which was my son’s second choice after Elon where he attended).

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On the subject of Jesuit colleges/universities, perhaps add St. Louis University to the list.

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D21 is at Elon. We both really liked University of Denver too!

I want to chime in about being too high stats for Elon. First of all, they have several programs with separate applications that give additional merit and other perks like special classes and educational trips. Your kid could be a big fish in a medium sized pond!

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I have a senior at Elon and a sophomore at Denver so if you have any questions about either let me know. I would say Elon has more of a "preppy/Lululemon " vibe than Denver. My D at Elon is definitely not preppy so it took her a bit to find her people. Denver has a much more outsdoorsy vibe (Patagonia, socks & birkenstocks, etc). Also seems like many more liberal & LBGTQ kids but also plenty of fraternity and sporty kids as well. Just got back from moving my son into Denver and the kids are all so friendly. And there is so much to do in the area. Have you visited both? Both campuses are gorgeous but Denver is a bit rougher aroud the edges in terms of surrounding neighborhoods. I love both schools but Denver just seems to have so much to offer.

Other schools that felt similar to us were Miami Ohio, Clemson, and University of Dayton. Friendly kids, casual vibe, and beautiful campuses. Providence College also has a similar vibe but has a lot of kids from the northeast.

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Please tell us where she ends up! I know she must have a lot of great options.

I think this mom pulled her daughters application because she wasn’t happy with the initial Elon merit offer. Not sure if she is still on CC.

Thank you for telling me. I love reading about the different application journeys and how the kids almost always end up at great schools! It’s just a little frustrating because most of the time you don’t know how the story ends.

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I’m still here. We just went to visit the University of Alabama for Capstone Scholars Day this weekend. I didn’t scroll up, so I don’t know if I posted this, but she ended up with a 1480 SAT, and her counselor told the other students to check out her common app essay about gratitude (for a simple act of kindness and inclusion) for an example of what they should aim for.

Results so far:

Alabama: Guaranteed merit of $28K, admitted to Honors, and has an interview for Blount Scholars next weekend. If she gets that, I think this is likely what she will pick. She has a pot of money in her 529 and wants to save as much of it as possible in case she goes the PsyD route rather than PhD.

Denver: received Chancellor’s Scholarship of $33K plus $3K. She loves this school so much, but is a little concerned about the ratio of grad students to undergrad. Since she’s trying to save on undergrad costs, this may go on the short list for grad school.

TCU: Received the Dean’s Scholarship at $27K. I don’t think we have a strong shot at Chancellor’s, but they changed how it’s done this year so maybe we will find out soon. It seems that TCU, though the chart they provide is simple UW core gpa-based, when they award, it seems that they do bump up based on rigor, in our experience.

Baylor: admitted to honors and University Scholars, the most selective major, where you can design your own interdisciplinary major and you can skip general education requirements. Waiting for merit award and she was invited to participate in their Invitation to Excellence scholarship event. This will probably make our target, and may be a teensy bit better fit from my view, but she keeps going back to: Is it $XX better than Bama? And I have to concede it probably isn’t.

Texas Tech: in state and received the automatic merit, and their honors program is a true gem, but it comes in about the same cost as Alabama, and Tuscaloosa > Lubbock, per D.

Elon: probably her first choice, but no merit so :woman_shrugging: Love the school that loves you back, right?

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Such great choices! Congratulations.

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